covalent bonds
an intramolecular force
Intramolecular forces are not intermolecular forces !
A covalent bond is a strong chemical force that results from the sharing of electrons between atoms. It is a type of intramolecular force that holds atoms together within a molecule.
intramolecular force
intramolecular force not intermolecular force (I got it right on a test)
Ionic bond is an intramolecular force because it involves the attraction between positively and negatively charged ions within a single molecule.
Because there is the present of intermolecular force and intramolecular force
an intramolecular force
covalent bonds
In the case of a covalent bond, the intramolecular force is stronger than the intermolecular force. The covalent bond holds atoms together within a molecule, while intermolecular forces are weaker interactions between molecules.
An intramolecular force is any force that holds together the atoms making up a molecule or compound. There are three main types of intramolecular forces: - Ionic -Covalent - Metallic Ionic Intramolecular forces These forces exist between atoms of ionic compounds (molecules formed by transfer of electrons). It is the force of attraction between the cation (positively charged atom) and anion (negatively charged atom) in a molecule. Covalent intramolecular forces These forces exist between covalent compounds (molecules formed by sharing of electrons). It is the force of attraction between the bonded pair od electrons with the nucleii of the the two atoms
No, dipole-dipole forces are intermolecular forces - they occur between different molecules. Intramolecular forces, on the other hand, act within a single molecule to hold its atoms together.